New APPG on cerebral palsy - Transition to Adulthood
The APPG on Cerebral Palsy is launching a call for evidence for its next two sessions:
1. The transition to adulthood in health and education focussing on the lived experience of young people with Cerebral Palsy (26 April, 11:30am) can be watched here:
https://youtu.be/PdCixizNARU</div>
2. Examining the systems involved in the transition to adulthood in health and education for young people with Cerebral Palsy (21 June, 10am)
We are taking written submissions for our report to Parliamentarians with a deadline of 15 July.
We are seeking evidence from people with lived and professional experience of the process of supporting the transition of young people with cerebral palsy (14-25) into adulthood, with a focus on health, education and care needs. This evidence will be used to inform the recommendations the APPG makes to Government. Input from any interested stakeholder on these topics will be considered.
We are especially interested in hearing from:
· young people with cerebral palsy and/or their representatives
· charities, organisations, schools, and colleges/universities which actively support young people with cerebral palsy into work or further education
· organisations or businesses which actively promote the recruitment of young people with disabilities
· local authority staff with responsibility for planning and supporting the transition process for a young person with cerebral palsy from school into further education, work, or long-term care
· community organisations and services working with young people with cerebral palsy across their transition from children’s services to adult services
· health, care, and therapy professionals with responsibility of overseeing the transition of a young person with cerebral palsy from children’s services into adult services
· academic researchers or policymakers in the field of cerebral palsy services and transition services
The key themes we are seeking evidence on are:
Education
· How can effective partnerships between schools, further education establishments and workplaces be used to facilitate a smooth transition for the young person with cerebral palsy?
· The role of the young person’s parents/carers in the transition process, and the challenges facing families where a son or daughter is transitioning out of full-time education.
· What are the available supports to higher and further education and employment? What are the barriers? What support is lacking?
·
Healthcare
· The availability of effective assistive technology, AAC and technological training and support for young people with cerebral palsy throughout and beyond the transition process.
· What do families want in the co-ordination of health care and access to clinical services during transition and adulthood, and where should they be based?
· The role of health and therapy services in properly preparing the young person for transition to adult life.
General
· How the voice of the young person with cerebral palsy can be better heard in planning and decision making about transition arrangements.
· What does successful transition look like? How do we define that in terms of health, services, education, employment, social participation, independence etc?
· From the perspective of the young person, what arrangements for transition to adulthood have worked well and what haven’t worked well, with examples if possible. Where there have been challenges, what could/should have been put in place to mitigate these?
· What gaps exist, and where they exist, in provision for 14–19-year-olds transitioning to adult services.
· The necessary skill sets, knowledge and attitudes required for carrying out assessment reports and transition planning for young people with cerebral palsy.
· The importance of understanding the complexities of the transition to adulthood for young people with cerebral palsy and the impact that the correct – or lack of - knowledge and attitudes can have.
· The practical and personal pre-requisites necessary for the young person with cerebral palsy to properly equip them for successful transition to a fulfilling adult life and how the school/college and other agencies could and should provide these.
· The effectiveness of health, education and care services throughout the transition process and their ability to work in an integrated way to achieve positive outcomes for the young person with cerebral palsy as they enter adult life.
· The challenges facing statutory services in the transition stage from children to adult services for young people with cerebral palsy.
· How effective are the current SEND legislation and Code of Practice guidelines for supporting transition arrangements for young people with cerebral palsy and what could be improved?
· What the SEND Review is doing to support and improve transition arrangements for young people with cerebral palsy?
Submissions
Please limit your submission to 3 sides of A4, use clear sub-headings and include a brief bullet summary of your evidence at the top of the submission. We will also accept submissions in video or other non-written formats such as audio files of no more than two minutes in length.
Send with the subject line: APPG on Cerebral Palsy – call for evidence, to: cerebralpalsyappg@connectpa.co.uk
Specialist Information Officer and Cerebral Palsy Programme Lead
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Comments
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Thanks...of course I missed this today having had it on my "to do" email list for ages! I will defo respond though
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Good luck @forgoodnesssakeCommunity Volunteer Adviser with professional knowledge of education, special educational needs and disabilities and EHCP's. Pronouns: She/her.
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This looks very interesting. Unfortunately I’m a little too old!
♠️Community Volunteer Advisor ♠️
I’m a Speaker and Life Coach.
I have professional knowledge of Gender Identity & Sexuality
I coach people with all abilities to guide them to realise their potential and feel empowered
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Specialist Information Officer and Cerebral Palsy Programme Lead'Concerned about another member's safety or wellbeing? Flag your concerns with us.'
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Hello how are you
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Hello @ALTALAQA12. I am not sure who you intended your post for. Would you like to tell us so the right person can receive it?
Otherwise, I am good thank you. How are you doing today?Community Volunteer Adviser with professional knowledge of education, special educational needs and disabilities and EHCP's. Pronouns: She/her.
Please note: if I use the online community outside of its hours of administration, I am doing so in a personal capacity only. -
I want to prepare the adulthood
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I hear that you prepare the adulthood @ALTALAQA12. Would you like to tell us more about what "prepare the adulthood" looks like for you at the moment?Community Volunteer Adviser with professional knowledge of education, special educational needs and disabilities and EHCP's. Pronouns: She/her.
Please note: if I use the online community outside of its hours of administration, I am doing so in a personal capacity only.
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